Tuesday, May 1, 2012

CNN-IBN: Bangalore/Mumbai: The International
Society for Krishna consciousness, better known as ISKCON, is in the
throes of controversy. Members are battling a host of serious charges,
the most recent ones includes fraud and criminal conspiracy.

ISKCON, arguably India's biggest exporter of Lord Krishna to
the western world, is struggling to keep its spiritual identity intact
as scandal, corruption, and infighting threaten to tear its foundations
apart.
The ISKCON newsletter - with details of its gurus the world
over charged with child sex abuse, murder and embezzlement - is an
attempt to start a cleansing process. But now the bitter disagreement
over ISKCON's governance in India has split the organization right down
the middle.
At the centre of the split is control over the multi-crore
ISKCON temple in Bangalore, a battle that's now reached the Supreme
Court. ISKCON Bangalore and ISKCON Mumbai are both accusing each other
of conspiring to usurp the property.
ISKCON Mumbai itself is in trouble with a Kolkata court issuing
arrest warrants for its head Guru Jayapataka Swami and governing
council member Dayaram Das on charges of criminal conspiracy - for
falsely implicating a fellow devotee in a rape case. The warrants were
later quashed by the Kolkata High Court.
That's not all, Dayaram, while being internally investigated
for investing personal funds through the temple's mutual investment
schemes, questions are why former ISKCON member Satadhanya Das, accused
of child sexual abuse within ISKCON, was not reported to the country’s
law enforcement agencies.
ISKCON Governing Council member Dayaram Das email to Governing
Council members said, "Only criminal courts in India have jurisdiction
to try Satadhanya and others for their sexual abuse of children.” Speaking to CNN-IBN, Dayaram Das, says all charges against
ISKCON are part of a smear campaign by this man .. ISKCON Bangalore
head Madhu Pandit Das, himself accused of property fraud and
conspiracy.
ISKCON Bangalore representatives refused to speak to CNN-IBN.
The mudslinging continues with one serious charge after another coming
to light even as the Supreme Court urged both parties to reach a
peaceful settlement. The fact remains, that in the United States and
Europe, adverse publicity has ensured the multi-million dollar
religious organization is often shunned.